wouldnt bother messing around just buy new one !!!!!!!!!
IMHO, this is indicative of the throw away society that the marketing guru's have created. While I wouldn't criticise rscleaning for his comment, I have also experienced the other side of the proverbial coin from a manufacturers point of view.
The only way to keep production costs down is to mass produce product. If he were to send that pump in for repair, it would cost him postage of say £7.50 each way, parts (a new pressure switch costs £23.00), labour of say half an hour + VAT. So by the time he gets it back a week later, it has cost him nearly 75% of a new one. He is still left with an old pump and hasn't worked for a week if that was the only pump he had.
Personally, being of the old school, I would strip the pump down and try to find the problem - I would do this 'after hours' in my own time. In the meantime I would take the brand new pump I have in the cupboard in the office and fit it so we don't loose any working days. If the failure was something small and 'cheap' to repair then I would do it and keep that pump as a spare.
If the pump was well worn (I have 2 which are 7 years old) then I would probably use it as spare parts and order a new replacement. I certainly wouldn't send it away for repair. It would be uneconomical to do this.
Spruce